A different moneyer from the same collegia of 132 BC as the OP, M. Aburius Geminus, Crawford 250/1. Crawford in fact cites a hybrid of this...
and an L. Scipio Asiagenus: [ATTACH]
A couple: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Uncertain seated figure with raised arms, flanked by seated sphinxes or something... [ATTACH]
Here are a few RR quinarii: [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Yeah, that's also only a single die pair, Hersh 483 (O900/R3002). Reverse sequence mark rudder.
And, not to spill the beans, but the coin Doug is asking about is related to the OP type in another way as well-- surely both are products of the...
My example: [IMG]
A few others: [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [IMG]
These Calpurnius Piso Frugi with caduceus (as here) or quiver over Apollo's shoulder are genuinely rare and desirable. As it happens, I have one...
My only ex-Trau coin: [ATTACH]
That's a great coin, genuinely rare. Congratulations, Vespasian70! By any chance, were you the buyer of the unique Titus denarius with these types...
I think there was only one M&M when the Goodman Collection was being dispersed Doug. Germany and/or DC may have existed by 1997, just barely, but...
I have M&M FPL 90, from March 1950. (No, I wasn't collecting yet!) This isn't in it; the list has no Roman bronze at all.
I think this is the only JC denarius I have a photo of that I haven't posted here already: [ATTACH]
One more, inexplicably early; just a few years after the introduction of the denarius: [ATTACH]
Three more: [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
A few serrate denarii: [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Numismatist pdf.
Couple more: [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Separate names with a comma.